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BOC improves glass furnace performance

BOC unveiled its patented BOC Convective Glass Meltin(CGM) system at the recent Conference on Glass Problems, in Urbana, Illinois.

CGM is a radical new approach to glass melting that significantly increases furnace capacity and improves glass quality. It can also be used to extend the life and improve the performance of ailing furnaces.

"In the face of increasing financial pressure, glassmakers want to conserve capital and improve the productivity of their existing assets," says Sam Peterson, vice president and general manager, BOC Glass Technologies. "The BOC Convective Glass Melting System provides the means. Through innovations to oxy-fuel technology, CGM delivers a step-change improvement in the melting rate of fossil fuel furnaces. It can be used to boost the capacity of an existing furnace, or as the base technology of a new furnace. CGM routinely delivers capacity increases of twenty-five percent. Some customers have achieved increases greater than fifty percent."

CGM differs from traditional oxy-fuel and air-fuel systems in the placement and effectiveness of its burners. CGM directs oxy-fuel flames approximately downward onto the batch surface at the charging end of the furnace. CGM flames impinge directly on the raw batch material. As a result, batch melts faster than it does under air-fuel or conventional oxy-fuel flames.

Glassmakers can retrofit the BOC Convective Glass Melting System onto existing air-fuel or oxygen-fuel furnaces and use the accelerated glass melting capability to increase production within a given furnace, increase the pack/melt ratio, or reduce/eliminate electric boost. Glassmakers also have the option of integrating CGM into new furnace construction. Doing so would allow them to reduce furnace size, eliminate regenerators and recuperators, and eliminate electric boosting systems. CGM has operated in more than a dozen furnaces in the float, container, tableware, television, and fiberglass sectors. Customers have used CGM to recover capacity lost near the end of their furnace's life, to boost capacity above design level, and to achieve substantial improvements in yield and product quality.

Italian glass manufacturer Venini is once again in Italian hands. The company, which was acquired by Danish giant Royal Scandinavia in 1998 from the Gardini family, has been acquired by Italian Luxury, the company set up as part of a strategic alliance between Venice-based businessmen Giancarlo Chimento and Giuliano Tabacchi.Italian Luxury was assisted in the operation by Milan-based merchant bank Mediobanca.

Dr. L. Louis Hegedus, senior vice president, research and development for Atofina Chemicals, Inc., has announced that 24 researchers from the Company’s research center have been granted patents for 2000 and 2001 from the U.S.